In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce a Swiss politician and journalist, Roger Köppel (@KoeppelRoger). He's best-known for his weekly magazine, die Weltwoche, and for his pro-Kremlin commentary on social and Russia-sponsored media, as well as on his magazine.
1/22
Köppel has been the editor-in-chief at the Swiss weekly magazine Die Weltwoche since 2006. Before that he worked as the editor-in-chief at Die Welt. After his stint at Die Welt, he suddenly returned to Die Weltwoche and took over the majority of the shares that owned...
2/22
the paper, never disclosing where the money for this purchase came from. Köppel's also been the member of the Swiss National Council since 2015, receiving a record of 178 090 votes. His political stance has been described as "right-wing conservative" - recently he spoke...
3/22
at CPAC Budapest about the dangers of "woke conservatism". The event featured many prominent right-wing figures, including Viktor Orbán, Kari Lake, Paul Gosar & Jack Posobiec. Köppel has announced that he's leaving politics at the end of 2023, focusing more on his magazine.
4/22
On the day that Russia launched its full-scale invasion in Ukraine, Köppel's Weltwoche published a cover with Putin's face and text "The Misunderstood". In the article, he suggested that both journalists and intellectuals hate Putin because "he stands for everything that...
5/22
...they reject, demonize and therefore must not be: tradition, family, patriotism, war, religion, masculinity, military, power politics and national interests". He continues that Putin exposes the "decadence of the West" and that he's "our potential partner".
6/22
A week after Russia invaded Ukraine, Köppel called for "de-escalation" from the EU, stating that it shouldn't pour "fuel on the fire". Köppel's been calling for the lift of sanctions on Russia so many times, that you'd think that he has some vested interested in all this.
7/22
In May 2022, he tweeted about ruble being at "all-time high", continuing that the sanctions make "Putin rich and ourselves poor". Ruble's value was highest (but not all-time high) after the tight restrictions Russia had put on it & its value has dropped drastically since.
8/22
In Apr 2023, he tweeted about media freedom in Russia,stating that "In Russia I can download any media on the Internet". As of today,Russia's censorship organization Roskomnadzor blocks a small number of 4315 websites, including Instagram and Roger's old employer, Die Welt.
9/22
In addition to blocking thousands of websites, Russia also murders and imprisons journalists and opposition politicians. Maybe, as a journalist, Köppel has heard of Vladimir Kara-Murza, Anna Politkovskaya and Maksim Borodin?
10/22
He's also appeared as a commentator on RT DE,a German version of the Kremlin-funded propaganda channel,where he warned the West about interfering in Russia's brutal invasion. He's often declared that journalists should "stay neutral",but apparently this doesn't apply to him.11/22
Roger claims that there's a "proxy war" going on in Ukraine,and he blames the West & NATO's expansion for the whole incident,thus removing any sovereignty from those countries that want to join a defense alliance that would protect them from Russia's imperialistic invasions.12/22
It's fairly safe to say, that he has probably not read the articles about the plans that Russia had for the Baltics, Ukraine and for Moldova.
13/22
During the same month he also went to Russia and interviewed Russia's Presidential Commissioner for Children's Rights, Maria Lvova-Belova. She's been heavily involved in the abduction of children from Ukraine to Russia, and in Mar 2023, ICC issued an arrest warrant for...
14/22
...unlawful deportation of children. The interview provides a rosy picture of both Lvova-Belova and of Russia, promoting Russia's "traditional values" and bashing the "Decadent West" and its liberalism. Throughout the interview, Lvova-Belova parrots the classic Russian...
15/22
...narratives like the Ukrainians using "children as shields" in Mariupol, or that Ukraine refused to evacuate children from Bakhmut. Of course the real truth is that Russia is trying to fix its demographic nightmare by kidnapping Ukrainian children.
16/22
I'm sure that the lives of these abducted children will be peachy and rosy and all that, since Russia is well-known for taking such a good care of its own.
17/22
While in Moscow, Köppel also met with Putin's "chief propagandist", Vladimir Solovyov. In his absurd Weltwoche propaganda piece, Solovyov repeats the lies about the "Ukrainian Nazis" and "genocide in Donbas", while Roger refers to him as "Russia's Woody Allen".
18/22
The article ends with Köppel's thoughts: "why does one person, including our country, end up on a sanctions list just because he expresses opinions that do not suit our governments?".
19/22
Köppel's worldview seems to be, that he simply does not care about the civilian bombings, war crimes, abductions of children, rape, and other atrocities conducted by the Russians, in Ukraine, and on a daily basis. Instead he declares the genocidal maniac who's running the..
20/22
...whole show as "misunderstood", goes to Russia to interview his favorite propagandists like Solovyov, and even interviews Putin's partner-in-crime, fellow child abductor Maria Lvova-Belova.
21/22
Lately, several journalists who've worked for die Weltwoche have decided that enough's enough - for example veteran journalist Henryk M. Broder has decided to leave the sinking ship. Others have followed suit, one of them calling the paper a "central organ of stupidity".
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce an American political analyst and media executive, Steve Bannon.
He's best-known for being Trump's chief strategist, "flooding the zone with shit", and for attempting to unite far-right, pro-Putin political parties around Europe.
1/23
Bannon worked as an officer in the US Navy in the late 70s and early 80s, after which he worked as an investment banker at Goldman Sachs. He's also produced several Hollywood movies between 1991 and 2016. In 1980,Bannon was deployed to assist with the Operation Eagle Claw...
2/23
.., a failed effort to save 52 embassy staff members from Tehran ordered by Jimmy Carter. In a 2015 interview, Steve stated that this marked a turning point in his political stance, turning him into a "Reaganite". This ideology of a battle between "good and evil" can be...
...in the Russian Embassy in 2013, Farage started appearing on the Kremlin-controlled RT, where he was allegedly paid 2000 £ per appearance. RT also supported and cultivated UKIP from at least 2011. Nigel himself said that the claims that he accepted more than half a...
21/24
...million pounds from RT as "nonsense", stating that he had only "two small appearance fees". He also denied meeting with Mr. Yakovenko (in the photo with Farage below) in a 2018 segment on LBC.
22/24
I'm sure you can already guess who Nigel blames for the "situation" in Ukraine? Of course it's the EU and NATO who aggressively have expanded towards the always-peaceful Russia, thus threatening the peaceful Russian people with... something.
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce a British politician and TV presenter, Nigel Farage (@Nigel_Farage ). He's best-known for his prominent role in the Brexit campaign, and for his bootlicking of Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin.
1/24
Farage joined the Conservative party at the age of 14. From early on, euroscepticism was at the core of his politics and he voted for the Green Party in 1989 due to their "sensible" policies towards the EU. He left the Conservative party in 1992 in protest to the signing...
2/24
...of the Treaty on European Union, which forms the basis of the EU law. In 1993, Farage was a founding member of the Eurosceptic, right-wing populist UK Independence Party (UKIP). He was elected as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) in 1999, and was re-elected in...
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce an American political activist, attention-seeker and TV presenter, Jack Posobiec (@JackPosobiec). He's best-known for his tendency to lie and spread conspiracy theories, and for his pro-Kremlin views on the Russo-Ukrainian War.
1/24
Posobiec rose to popularity during the 2016 US presidential election, while working for Roger Stone's organization Citizens for Trump. Jack's style of promoting lies and making up stuff resembles Stone's "admit nothing, deny everything, and launch a counterattack"...
2/24
...style of propaganda, in which there isn't any kind of commitment to the truth. Jack has also described himself as "Roger Stone's man". He worked in the United States Navy Reserve from 2010 until 2018. A former active duty naval intelligence officer stated that Jack...
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll talk about the Trump 2016 presidential campaign, and how it was connected to various Russian actors.
In this retrospect, I'll introduce some of the people who worked in Trump's 2016 campaign for the presidency, outlining their activities.
1/23
After becoming the president of his father's real estate ventures in early 70s, he started expanding its operations aggressively by building hotels, casinos and whatnot. Trump's businesses have been involved in over 4000 legal actions & he's filed for bankruptcy six times.
2/23
While studying in college during the Vietnam War era, Trump deferred draft four times. After his graduation, he was diagnosed with bone spurs, thus avoiding going to the war. This diagnosis was allegedly made by a podiatrist, Dr. Larry Braunstein, who rented his office from..3/23
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll be talking about the Russian style of online propaganda and disinformation, "Firehose of Falsehood". It's a commonly used Kremlin strategy for Russian information operations, which often prioritizes quantity over quality.
1/23
I have mentioned this particular strategy in many of my previous soups, but have never discussed it in more detail, so here goes. The term was originally coined by Paul & Matthews in their 2016 paper, The Russian "Firehose of Falsehood" Propaganda Model.
2/23
They based this name on two distinctive features: 1) high volume, multi-channel approach, and 2) shameless willingness to spread disinformation.
Academic Giorgio Bertolin described Russian disinformation as entertaining, confusing and overwhelming.